September 2025 FIDE Ratings: A New Top 10 player Appeared

XB

September 1, 2025

The latest FIDE Classical rating list (September 2025) has brought major shifts at the top.

  • GM Wesley So has returned to the world’s elite top-10 after his victory at the 2025 Sinquefield Cup.
  • GM Vincent Keymer, just 20 years old, has entered the top-10 for the first time, following his dominant run at the Quantbox Chennai Grand Masters.

Meanwhile, Anish Giri narrowly slipped out of the top group, and Nodirbek Abdusattorov plummeted after a rough showing in St. Louis.


🔝 Movers in the Top 10

  • Wesley So (USA) – Jumped to world #7 with a gain of +11 Elo after tying for first and winning the playoff at the Sinquefield Cup. This marks his first time back in the top-10 since October 2024.
  • Vincent Keymer (GER) – Picked up a massive +21 Elo, climbing to #10 after an undefeated triumph in Chennai. He called the milestone “a special and memorable moment” when he first hit the mark on the live list.
  • Arjun Erigaisi (IND) – Edged up to world #5, overtaking World Champion Gukesh D despite both underperforming in their recent events.
  • Praggnanandhaa R. (IND) – Added +6 Elo, staying at #4, tied for first in St. Louis but losing out in the playoff.
  • Fabiano Caruana (USA) – Remains steady at #3, picking up +5 Elo in St. Louis.

⚠️ Slips at the Top

  • Gukesh Dommaraju (IND) – Dropped to #6, losing 9 points.
  • Alireza Firouzja (FRA) – Held #8, but shed 12 points after a disappointing finish in St. Louis.
  • Anish Giri (NED) – Fell to #12 despite placing second in Chennai.
  • Nodirbek Abdusattorov (UZB) – Suffered the biggest blow, a –23 Elo collapse in St. Louis, crashing to #11.

🌍 Highlights from Sinquefield & Chennai

  • St. Louis (Sinquefield Cup): Caruana, Praggnanandhaa, and So shared first place, but So’s playoff victory gave him the title and a return to the top-10. Abdusattorov finished last on just 2.5/9.
  • Chennai (Quantbox Grand Masters): Keymer completely dominated, finishing two points clear of the field with five wins and no losses. Giri came second but couldn’t retain his top-10 place.

🔄 Other Climbers in the Top 50

  • Dmitry Andreikin (RUS): +15 Elo, now #30.
  • Nodirbek Yakubboev (UZB): +18 Elo, up to #45.
  • Kirill Alekseenko (AUT): Huge leap of +22 Elo, moving to #49.
  • Matthias Bluebaum (GER): +11 Elo, climbing to #51.
  • Radoslaw Wojtaszek (POL): +13 Elo, reaching #60.

🎯 Circuit Standings

Praggnanandhaa continues to lead the FIDE Circuit 2025, now sitting at 107 points, more than double Giri’s 52.77. However, he still must fulfill the participation requirements in large open events like the upcoming Grand Swiss (Samarkand) and the World Cup (Goa).

If Praggnanandhaa qualifies for the 2026 Candidates via those routes, then players like Giri and Abdusattorov could fight for a spot through the Circuit standings.


👶 Junior Rankings

The top of the Junior list remains unchanged, but with some turbulence:

  1. Praggnanandhaa – 2785 (+6)
  2. Gukesh D – 2767 (–9)
  3. Javokhir Sindarov – 2722
  4. Volodar Murzin – 2670 (–8)
  5. Raunak Sadhwani – 2658 (–18)

📈 Notable junior movers:

  • Yagiz Kaan Erdogmus (2011-born) – climbed past Ediz Gurel to #6.
  • Pranesh M (IND) – surged +22 to break into the top-10 at #10, after winning the Challengers in Chennai.
  • Aditya Mittal (IND) – biggest gainer, +29, rising to #20 after winning the Qonaev Cup.
  • Denis Lazavik (BLR) – crossed 2600 for the first time, climbing +21.

👑 Women’s Rankings

At the top, things remain stable:

  • Hou Yifan (CHN) – still #1 with 2609.
  • Ju Wenjun (CHN) and Lei Tingjie (CHN) follow at #2 and #3.

But there was drama in the middle of the list:

  • Tatev Abrahamyan (USA) made the leap of the month, gaining +64 Elo after her best-ever tournament in Budapest, shooting up to #37 and finally confirming her IM title.
  • Zhu Jiner (CHN) continues her steady climb, now at #4 with +12.
  • Harika Dronavalli (IND) and Vaishali Rameshbabu (IND) both lost significant ground, dropping to #19 and #22 respectively.

🔑 Takeaways

  • So and Keymer are the big winners of September, reshaping the top-10.
  • Abdusattorov’s stumble in St. Louis opened the door for Keymer’s official breakthrough.
  • India continues to dominate in juniors, with Praggnanandhaa, Gukesh, and Pranesh all making headlines.
  • Abrahamyan’s Cinderella run was the highlight on the women’s list.

The next stop on the calendar: the Grand Swiss in Samarkand, starting in just days, with Candidates qualification hanging in the balance.

Full ranking

#NameFedRatingB-Year
1Carlsen, MagnusNOR28391990
2Nakamura, HikaruUSA28071987
3Caruana, FabianoUSA27891992
4Praggnanandhaa RIND27852005
5Erigaisi ArjunIND27712003
6Gukesh DIND27672006
7So, WesleyUSA27561993
8Firouzja, AlirezaFRA27542003
9Wei, YiCHN27531999
10Keymer, VincentGER27512004
11Abdusattorov, NodirbekUZB27482004
12Giri, AnishNED27461994
13Aronian, LevonUSA27441982
14Anand, ViswanathanIND27431969
15Nepomniachtchi, IanRUS27421990
16Mamedyarov, ShakhriyarAZE27411985
17Vachier-Lagrave, MaximeFRA27381990
18Dominguez Perez, LeinierUSA27381983
19Ding, LirenCHN27341992
20Niemann, Hans MokeUSA27332003
21Fedoseev, VladimirSLO27311995
22Duda, Jan-KrzysztofPOL27291998
23Le, Quang LiemVIE27291991
24Sindarov, JavokhirUZB27222005
25Topalov, VeselinBUL27171975
26Yu, YangyiCHN27141994
27Vidit, Santosh GujrathiIND27121994
28Aravindh, Chithambaram VR.IND27111999
29Rapport, RichardHUN27111996
30Andreikin, DmitryFID27101990
31Harikrishna, PentalaIND27041986
32Liang, AwonderUSA26982003
33Wang, HaoCHN26981989
34Nihal SarinIND26932004
35Sevian, SamuelUSA26922000
36Van Foreest, JordenNED26921999
37Maghsoodloo, ParhamIRI26922000
38Radjabov, TeimourAZE26921987
39Dubov, DaniilRUS26911996
40Esipenko, AndreyRUS26872002
41Sarana, AlexeySRB26862000
42Bu, XiangzhiCHN26841985
43Eljanov, PavelUKR26821983
44Svidler, PeterFID26821976
45Yakubboev, NodirbekUZB26812002
46Kasimdzhanov, RustamUZB26751979
47Robson, RayUSA26741994
48Alekseenko, KirillAUT26741997
49Deac, Bogdan-DanielROU26742001
50Tabatabaei, M. AminIRI26732001
51Bluebaum, MatthiasGER26711997
52Murzin, VolodarFID26702006
53Shankland, SamUSA26701991
54Kovalenko, IgorUKR26691988
55Karthikeyan, MuraliIND26691999
56Howell, David W LENG26681990
57Vitiugov, NikitaENG26661987
58Leko, PeterHUN26661979
59Artemiev, VladislavRUS26641998
60Wojtaszek, RadoslawPOL26611987
61Nguyen, Thai Dai VanCZE26602001
62Oparin, GrigoriyUSA26601997
63Sadhwani, RaunakIND26582005
64Grischuk, AlexanderRUS26571983
65Saric, IvanCRO26551990
66Christiansen, Johan-SebastianNOR26551998
67Navara, DavidCZE26531985
68Sargsyan, ShantARM26532002
69Gelfand, BorisISR26521968
70Mamedov, RaufAZE26511988
71Bjerre, Jonas BuhlDEN26512004
72Indjic, AleksandarSRB26501995
73Morozevich, AlexanderRUS26501977
74Grandelius, NilsSWE26481993
75Yuffa, DaniilESP26481997
76Kollars, DmitrijGER26471999
77Lu, ShangleiCHN26471995
78Adams, MichaelENG26461971
79Erdogmus, Yagiz KaanTUR26462011
80Gledura, BenjaminHUN26461999
81Theodorou, NikolasGRE26462000
82Rodshtein, MaximISR26451989
83Vokhidov, ShamsiddinUZB26452002
84Vallejo Pons, FranciscoESP26441982
85Maroroa Jones, Gawain C BENG26431987
86Svane, FrederikGER26432004
87Malakhov, VladimirFID26431980
88Puranik, AbhimanyuIND26402000
89Xiong, JefferyUSA26402000
90Salem, A.R. SalehUAE26401993
91Martinez Alcantara, Jose EduardoMEX26391999
92Chigaev, MaksimESP26381996
93Bacrot, EtienneFRA26371983
94Amin, BassemEGY26361988
95Kryvoruchko, YuriyUKR26321986
96Gurel, EdizTUR26312008
97Tari, AryanNOR26311999
98Ivic, VelimirSRB26302002
99Safarli, EltajAZE26301992
100Hovhannisyan, RobertARM26291991